I have to disagree w/the fear about the raw diet. Yes, there are things you have to be careful about, as w/any diet, but compared to the junk that is in a lot of commercial pet food (including supposedly good brands like Science Diet--yes, I include the prescription formulas in that one), it is way healthier. (not to mention stuff like, oh, the pet food recall...)
I'm just going to have to say *sigh*.
You seem to dismiss the real problems that raw-food diets pose (like pathogens and obstructions) a little too nonchalantly. I'd like to know what the "junk" is that you speak of in commercial pet foods, and how you know that a BARF diet is "way healthier"? What are your sources beyond the one website link?
The pet food recall was horrific - yes, but even in light of that - commercial pet foods are still the safest thing to feed your pets. My three cats are on Hill's Science diet - as are hundreds of thousands of others. Commercial pet food companies have a vested interest in your pets health - and I believe they do take it seriously. Who would buy their food otherwise? I'm not saying that commercial pet foods are perfect...but what is?
There is a lot of information out there on how to feed raw well. Here is one link to start w/ that debunks some myths:
http://www.rawfed.com/myths/index.html
And as for the website...sorry to say but anyone can put up a website saying whatever they like. Where I'm coming from is professors with decades of clinical experience and research to back up what they have to say. And studies galore.
"Evaluation of bacterial and protozoal contamination of commercially available raw meat diets for dogs
Rachel A. Strohmeyer DVM, MS Paul S. Morley DVM, PhD, DACVIM Doreene R. Hyatt PhD David A. Dargatz DVM, DACVIM A. Valeria Scorza VMD, MS Michael R. Lappin DVM, PhD, DACVIM
Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—Bacterial contamination is common in commercially available raw meat diets, suggesting that there is a risk of foodborne illness in dogs fed these diets as well possible risk for humans associated with the dogs or their environments."
Raw meat diets spark concern (from the Journal of American Veterinary Medical Association - News, January 15, 2005)
"There is a greater apparent risk to animals and humans from feeding a raw meat diet," Dr. Strohmeyer commented. "I really do not think that there is any advice we, as veterinarians, can give to improve safety. You can give basic food safety guidelines like hand washing, cleaning surfaces, and bowls, etc., not letting the food sit out for extended periods of time. I just think that it would be a disservice for a veterinarian to give any recommendation for the safety of dogs and their owners (except to not feed raw meat to pets). Bacteria are not the only health concern, there are also parasites and protozoal organisms that can be transmitted in raw meat, even meat labeled fit for human consumption."
Other veterinarians, including Dr. Jeffrey LeJeune, a food safety molecular epidemiologist and microbiologist at The Ohio State University, agree that pets should not be fed raw meat. This may be a hard sell, however, to some clients.
"From my own clinical experience, owners that feed raw (meat) pretty much have their minds set that they are going to feed raw," Dr. Strohmeyer said. She thinks clients who are thinking about feeding raw (meat), however, can be swayed fairly easily, just by basic education"
From the World Small Animal Veterinary Association Congress in Vancouver, 2001
"Biochemical and mathematical analysis of the BARF and other raw diets has shown that there are significant imbalances in some minerals. Calcium, phosphorus, zinc, magnesium and iron were either low or high in these analyses. The diets were also cultured for enteropathogens, and E. coli 0157 [pathogenic to humans!] was found in one of the three diets examined."
(I am less familiar w/raw feeding for dogs than w/cats, just because we have cats--who eat raw!--right now, but I know for cats, the risk of food poisoning is much smaller than you'd think, because they have a much quicker transit time through their digestive system than humans do.)
Thinking like this is just dangerous, and wrong. I'm going to have to address this later when it's not 1am.